Hamilton

Hamilton

by

Lin-Manuel Miranda

Teachers and parents! Our Teacher Edition on Hamilton makes teaching easy.
Themes and Colors
Collaboration, Disagreement, and Democracy Theme Icon
Stories vs. History Theme Icon
Ambition and Mortality Theme Icon
Immigration and Diversity of Influence Theme Icon
Honor Theme Icon
LitCharts assigns a color and icon to each theme in Hamilton, which you can use to track the themes throughout the work.

Collaboration, Disagreement, and Democracy

Midway through Lin-Manuel Miranda’s smash-hit musical Hamilton, the titular character lays out his lifelong goal: Alexander Hamilton is all in “for a strong central democracy.” As Hamilton tries to create new institutions across state lines and ideological divides, he embraces collaboration as a necessary part of political life in the early United States. Though the American Revolution seems inevitable in retrospect, Hamilton asks audiences to look closer, to notice that each military tactic, each…

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Stories vs. History

As important generals and politicians during the years of the American Revolution, the main characters in Lin-Manuel Miranda’s musical Hamilton are aware that their actions will be judged by the annals of history—indeed, George Washington sings an entire song called “History Has Its Eyes on You.” But even though the most dramatic battles and duels have been written about to no end, the musical still makes clear the gap between lived experience and the way…

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Ambition and Mortality

In Lin-Manuel Miranda’s musical Hamilton, death and ambition are intimately intertwined. Midway through the song “My Shot,” in which Alexander Hamilton raps about his big dreams and boundless ambition, he is struck by a darker thought: “I imagine death so much it feels more like a memory.” And early on in the show, Hamilton sees war and the opportunity to die as a martyr for the new United States as a sure way…

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Immigration and Diversity of Influence

One line in Hamilton always gets an especially lengthy round of applause: “immigrants,” the French Marquis de Lafayette sings to his Caribbean-born friend Alexander Hamilton, “we get the job done.” Hamilton constantly emphasizes that immigration is essential to the United States’ success. The musical’s composer, Lin-Manuel Miranda, was the child of an immigrant from Puerto Rico, and he immediately identified with Hamilton as a striver, someone hoping to reinvent himself in a foreign land…

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Honor

Honor is one of the most important values for all of the characters in Hamilton. From the very first moments of the show, Alexander Hamilton is obsessed with his reputation. “All I have is my honor,” he tells his wife Eliza in their courtship; later, he and nemesis Aaron Burr share a rare moment of commiseration that when it came time to name a nearby street, nobody chose either one of them as the…

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